Hydrocarbon pressure gradient: plotting

From AAPG Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

We can estimate the downdip free-water level from a valid fluid pressure measured within a reservoir.

Plotting gradient

The table below outlines the procedure for plotting a hydrocarbon pressure gradient on a hydrostatic pressure plot when a measured pressure is available from the reservoir.

Step Action
1 Plot measured fluid pressure on a hydrostatic pressure–depth plot.
2 Determine the hydrocarbon pressure gradient from one of two ways:
  • Measured hydrocarbon density
  • Estimates of hydrocarbon density
3 Determine the buoyancy pressure gradient: static water pressure gradient minus hydrocarbon pressure gradient.
4 Determine a pressure above or below the measured depth point. The table below lists the steps for determining this number.
  1. Pick a depth above or below the measured point.
  2. Multiply the difference in depth by the buoyancy pressure gradient.
  3. Add the number from step 2 to the measured pressure if the depth is deeper; subtract if shallower.

Example: Measured pressure at depth::7607 ft is pressure::3530 psi and buoyancy pressure gradient is 0.076 psi/ft. What is the hydrocarbon pressure at depth::7507 ft?

Solution:

5 Plot the pressure number from step 4 on the pressure–depth plot and draw a line between this point and the measured pressure point. This line is the hydrocarbon pressure gradient.

See also

External links

find literature about
Hydrocarbon pressure gradient: plotting